- “THE SEA WITH MOOD” Ch'town Camera Club Shown Hotel Union Gets Parade Film And Color Slides Anglican Backing The Charlottetown Camera | Club. met last week in the’ theatre of the National Film Board in the federal - building A colour film of the Char- lottetown centennial parade ‘in 1955 was shown, | Two club members, Dr: Rob- | ert Abel and Roddie Hickox | showed colour slides of unusual gubject and lighting conditions. Margaret Mallett placed first in the black and white competition, “The Sea, Mood” with her entry “Novem- ber’ Eve". Roland Taylor re ceived second and third. The meeting ended with @ | very spirited auction sale of photographic equipment led by the president, Roland Taylor as | auctioneer, Flection Year Sparks Heatéd House Debate. By KEN KELLY | OTTAWA (CP)—The heated charge and counter-charge of election-year debating in the) Commons sometimes gets a bit | lips out of hand. Personal references to mem- bers during debate are banned | under rules but last week elec- tion - pitch debating produced problems for new deputy speaker, Paul Martineau. Here are a few exchanges from particularly - heated por- , tions of the debate: ‘Grant Campbell (PC — Stor- mont), referring to Opposition | Leader Pearson's speech: Pro- | verbs, chapter 17, verse 2 Montague Man Passes Suddenly MONTAGUE — The death | “seems particularly appropri- ate... ‘even a fool, when he holdeth his peace is counted jwise; and he that shutteth his | is esteemed a man of un- \derdenting. i H. W. Herridge (CCF—Koote- nay West) referring to Mr. Campbell: . . His Gallic fervor, his quotations from seriptures, his physical animation and his pre tentious diction gave an appear- ance of substance to what was, in effect, pure wind,” ae ee eid) in , “Can ( Herridge) in = us who is responsible f ‘impure wind which is Berd ing from that quarter of the house?" UNWARRANTED ATTACK J.-M, Macdonnel (PC—Tor- onto. Greenwood): Mr. \ridge’s remarks. were an “‘un- Her- | @ccurred very suddenly in the warranted attack made by a early hours of Sunday morning |Sassenach from West Koote- Feb. 11, of Bejamin Maclarre, nay. , , ." aged 50. He was born in Mur-| Prime Minister Dfefenbaker, ray Harbor North on Jan. 7, | referring to the contributory +1908, the. son of the late Cort- ‘pension plan advanced by Mr. D. MacLure and Margaret | MacLure. young man Mr, Mac. | Montague, where he has since lived, An ardent to fos community sports. late Mr. MacLure kcaves mourn we wife, the Glen | of ; ater and two | Mrs. Gilbert | Clements, Montague; ‘Arnold, | lontague; one sis- | lormer | => MacLure, all of Montague; two @isters, and five brothers pre- | Montague Funeral Home from ‘the Presbyterian Church, Mon- tague on Tuesday, Feb, 13 at. 2 o'clock. Committal service will be at the Montague Com- munity cemetery. EASTERN BRIEFS VISITED SON... - Mrs. Catherine Down, Charlo- tietown recently visited her son, Ed. Down and Mrs, Dow, Mon- tague. RECENT GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Russell Down, Charlottetown were recent guests of Mrs. Down's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Dan Stewart, Kilmuir, IN VETERANS WING Lester McKeeman, Montague fe a patient in the Veterans Wing of the Prince Edward Is- land Hospital, Charlottetown. HAD VISIT Gordon Nicholson, Com- | Laurier), + OTTAWA (CP) — A. Gordon ‘|Murphy, chief engineer of the | Pearson. and his Liberal col- | leagues: “It is one of the most pro digious hoaxes in- all history” Mr, Pearson in reply: “I recognize the authority of the prime minister to talk gbout hoaxes." In an earlier debate, H. C. McQuillan (PC — Comox - Al berni) referred to Paul Martin (L—Essex East): - ".. . , 1 shall always think of (him) as a blue jay-or camp robber. Sometimes those birds . |are known as Whisky-jacks,"” Health Minister Monteith, re- ‘ferring to Mr. Martin: “I shall see he gets a job jat the Stratford Sheakespearean | Festival if he comes there.” “Don’t ruin the festival,’ in- | ‘terjected Veterans Minister Churchill, | AIMS AT DIEF J. W. Pickersgill (L—Bona- vista-Twillingate), aiming at al eee target, Mr. Diefen- mm bak f > man who is absent from his office one day out of every two for three months cannot be doing his job.” Mr. Monteith, defending Mr, Diefenbaker: “That is_an absolute lie,” Works Minister Walker, dis- }eussing Mr.Pickersgill: “You will be locked up one of these days, you Pickersgil- lian twist.’ Lionel Chevrier . (L-—Montreal to Mr. Monteith in the same. exchange: “The minister has been asleep for four years.” Louis Joseph Pigeon (PC. Joliette - L’Assomption - Mont- calny): he “You,have beén asleep." Mr. Chevrier: mt “Pipe down Mortimer Snerd.” ‘Mr. ee despairingly: | wild animal import and export | TORONTO (CP)—Four Angli- can clergymen and 16 of their parishioners Saturday joined the picket lines of the striking Ho- tel and Club Employees Union (CLC) at the Royal York Hotel. | Canon Moore Smith of St. Mathias Chureh, who. led the demonstration, protested against the hotel management settle- ment proposal to rehire. only 90 per cent of more than 400 strik- lers remaifiing on the picket line “This is thoroughly undemo- cratic,” said Canon Smith of the proposal, which was turned) down by the union two weeks ago. Union rejection of the plan upset an attempt by Ontario La- | bot’. Minister W. K. Warrender to mediate an end to the strike, | which started last April 24. Canon Smith said ‘the decision | to join the picket line followed | a prayer meeting and discussion | at his church Saturday morning. The group picketed for an hour) after noon. | The other clergymen picketing | | were Rev. Vincent Goring, edu- | cational secretary of the Chris-| jtlan Student Movement of Can- | ada; Rev. Daniel Heap, assist- | ant minister at St, Matthew's | Chureh, and Rev. Donald Var- | coe, a divinity student at the University of Toronto, Red Hot Pipes Cause Alarm 1 ‘M ISLAND. NEWS. PAGE: ontaque, Souris, Kings County 4 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Feb 12, 1962. Geo‘town Home And School To Receive ScoutCharter | GEORGETOWN — The Boyjer, compared and contrasted Scouts of Canada will present the | | Canadian and econon- Georgetown Home and School /ic and educational systems dur- Association with its charter as) ing the post war years. Now liv- sponsoring body at the annual! ing in Souris West, Dr. Marold, meeting in June, Vernon Myers came here from Germany about announced at the monthly meet- 10 years ago. ing of the association held in the, Mrs. Alec Arsenault, finance high school | committee, told of receiving re- This was learned from Gordon | ceipt books for the Boy Scout Kerr. executive commissioner | Association, and asked the spon- for Boy Scouts when he met with | soring tbody to supply canvass- | instinktivly shrink | nue form ov ‘spelling the group committee and spon- ers. Volunteers were Mrs. soring committee last month. Mar- cellus Gotell, Mrs. Philip Members of the groyp com- Boudreault, Miss Betty Lou Hay- mittee are Vernon Myers, chair- ter, Miss Jacueline Christian and man; J.W. Lavers, secretary and Vernon Myers, public relations; Mrs. Joan Currie, training committee; Mrs. Alee Arsenault, treasurer head of the finance committee, Arthur MacNeill and Robert Dorgan introduced and thanked and the guest speaker. Mrs. Cecil LeLacheur, the president, pre- and Spurgeon Walker, camping sided, committee. The next meeting is set for | Dr. W.G. Marold, et speak-' Mar. 8. New Phonetic Spelling Form To Be Studied AtMeeting By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP) — Due yue from eny chaenj in whot is familyar? If yue due, dhan dhis wil jar yue. It iz- purfektly natueral to think dheez wurdz kweer or ugly. Dhis objekshon iz aulwaez dhe furst to be maed to a It is auslo dhe hardest to remuuv. (Don't be confused, dear reader.) Dhis is a nue form ov spelling dhat printz wurdz az wurdz sound, (And it is the subject of a special paper prepared by a committee headed by Profes- sor Christopher Dean of Queen's University at King- ston, Ont., for discussion at the 1962 Canadian Conference on Education in Montreal next month.) ; Az longg az dhe nue speling | tz nue it wil seem unplezant bee unfamilyar. Indeed, dhis efekt iz not weekend until | dhe nue speling iz noe longger nue. (Professor Dean, however, | doesn't take a stand on the | Morell Village firemen were called to the home of Mrs. Selbert Murphy. Red Head Road, Saturday night when a malfunctioning - furnace turned stovepipes red with heat and sent showers of sparks flying from the chimney, Both Morell fire engines | answered the call but their ser-. vices were not required. The | pipes cooled without causing any | damage. spelling one way or another in his paper. He merely gives the history of English spelling and then cites the arguments - for and against reformed spelling based on phonetics.) Due dheez wurdz and spel- ing seem aud? .. (Professor Dean says the very arbitrariness of English spelling immediately calls forth the opposition. of man's logical facilities. He cites this Blind Man Builds FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)—| Take a sickly mountain lion) and $50. Toss in an old type- writer, add determination and) stir with enthusiasm, Then, says Dale Logston, | | ‘work like hell. With these unusual ingredi- | ents, Logston, blind since child- hood, has built-an international business. “Five years ago I was jobless. | I had about $50 and a sick little, |mountain lion given me by @ ‘Tulsa. 200, | “T came to Fort Worth, put) $50 down on a house and hocked jmy old college typewriter for | $35. I cured the mountain lion |and traded him to the Central Texas zoo_jn Waco. In -return, I got 35 rattlesnakes, a dozen great horned owls, a few miscel- laneous animals like raccoons and skunks and some hawks. | SOLD CHEAPLY | “I sat. down and wrote a dozen -peopie I knew who fool with these things and I made the price so cheap they had no alternative but to buy. “IT wound up with $300, “To supplement things, I put | my wife to work for two years. | We got things rolling pretty good and now, well, I can't | complain. ‘ i Logston’s Animals interne- cities in the United States and Canada as well as such circuses as Clyde Beatty's and Gil Gray's. Logston has a touch with ani- mals, He's trouble with snakes. Two rat- tlers have hitten him as well as two copperheads, one of which was a pet that someone alarmed | while Logston was holding it. He's had more problems from ununderstanding humans “The neighbors got kinda tired of antelope and the sort roam. | ing around their lawns. One woman gazed in terror as an anteater ambled into the yard where her daughter was | playing. One of Logstons chim- J panzees startled another house- | as one argument for reform and notes that the new spell- ing would save teaching time in school, get rid of the drudgery of learning to read, » increase comprehension and fluency in children, even help reduce delinquency by mak- ing: education easier, hence easing emotional troubles that lead to crime.) . Dheez ar dhe kaesez for dbe nue speling. . (But the professor, in his 22-page paper also gives. the arguments against a reformed method of spelling — public apathy and. prejudice, im- mense labor needed to per- suade people’ to accept it, objections from printers, need to reprint many books, ob- jections from scientists who coin new words from Latin and Greek elements, contin- uing changes as pronunciation changes, different regional ac- cents and so on.) Wifot kan be mor familyar dhan dhe form ov wurdz dhat we hav seen and riten mor tiemz dhan we kan posibly estimaet? Yet dheez wordz must seem mor familyar dhan when yue kaem akros dhem furst. (All of which indicates the 2,000 delegates at the Mont- real conference will have lots to talk about when they con- sider the nue speling.) toured the world buying up ani- mals. He seldom handles poisonous snakes and the more agggressive of his aquisitions now, and _ his only close. pet is Hugo, a weath- erbeaten Chesapeake ~ retriever. “He's not worth 25 cents but I wouldn't take $1,000,000 for) him.” SPECULATORS TO DIE (Reuters) — The Unusual Business| Pee urday sentenced four persons to die before the firing squad for currency speculation, the Soviet news agency Tass reported from Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital. Four other persons were sent- enced to prison terms ranging only been in serious ‘from four to 10 years, Tass said. of the moon is being mapped — in TOBACCO EMBARGO WORRIES FLORIDA PLANT | Tobacco executive James | J. Corral inspects what may be one of the last shipments | of Cuban tobacco leaf to be | used by his firms while work- er in his plant looks on. Some Explorers Of Moon To Have Accurate Maps, Expert Says By JOHN E. BIRD OTTAWA (CP) — The United States’ top moon mapper said Wednesday that when astronauts from earth land on’ the moon they'll have maps that would have made Christopher Colum- bus. green with envy. Albert(L. Nowicki, chief of the department of cartography of the map service of the U.S Army Corps of Engineers, said in an interview that | detailed maps of the moon are being pre- pared in anticipation of a junar landing within perhaps a de- cade. Mr. Nowkici {s-in Ottawa to attend the annual meeting of the Canadian Institute of Surveying. He will deliver a technical pa- per today on a crash program now in progress in the U.S. to map the visible surface of the moon and. later the hidden sur- | face. | The moon mapping project has been undertaken by the U.S. Army map service for the Na- | tional Aeronautical and Space Administration. Its main objec- tive is to map proposed landing sites fom the first American lu- | nar landing. COULD CAUSE CRASH Inadequate knowledge of the topography of the seleeted land- ing site could result in a space craft crashing into the side of a | crater or a mountain. Once the space craft had landed, the as- | tronauts would need to know | something of the surrounding surface area to be able to move about. Mr. Nowicki said. maps used by Columbus and other early ex- plorers won't be nearly as ac- curate as those that will be used by the first travellers to the moon. . ‘Before going to the moon the astronaut must know where he is going and how to find his way about once he arrives,’ he said. “There will be no gas sta- tions where he can pick up a road map.” Mr. Nowicki said the surface wife by walking in the kitchen | ‘door as she was cooking dinner. | NEIGHBORS FED UP Needless. to say the neighbors finally called the zoning board. “I can't. blame them”, said Logston: “I'd probably complain, too, if I had a neighbor like —me.’ The zoning board gave Log- | ston until next summer to re- locate. Since then, Logston has been Seaway Engineer Plans To Retire — St. Lawrence Seaway Authority | since 1954, will retire March 1 | after 37 years service with the. federal — it was an. | nounced Sunda WHITE GASOLINES*MOTOR O1Ls RO! 14th, 8 p.m. Mrs. M tion at this meeting. , |boarding some of his animals |. at a friend's farm and others é Annual Meeting Progressive Conservative Association Kings annual meeting Georgetown Hall, aa other speakers will be in attendance. chairmen are requested to have a good representa- President of Kings County Progressive Conservative Association. ae. Macdonald, M.P., All all ©. A. SHAW, - content of more .cent. They ‘aid they seized sev. 6,000 workers depend on the | dustry’s main raw material Tampa cigar industry for Manufacturers are ex : . “< yale a Mienting with tobacco from President Kennedy’s total em- | domestic and‘ Central Amer- bargo on Cuban goods cut-off | ican sources in attempt to supply of the Tamps_in- come up with a suitable sub- stitute for Havana leaf. - (AP Wirephoto) detail through the use of photo graphs. The ultimate require- HHAHOOOO ACTOR PLUMMER HURT LONDON (CP)—Montreal ac- tor Christopher Plummer, 38, suffered minor injuries Satur- day when a car in which he was a passenger crashed into a lamp post outside Buckingham Pal- ace. i ment before a lunar landing would be to orbit cameras around the moon and transmit pictures back to earth. The: Rus- sians had already achieved this but the pictures made available to the West were not satisfac tory for map making. CHINESE LIQUOR PROBE EDMONTON (CP)—Police in Edmonton are investigating across-the-counter sales in Ed- monton stores of liquor imported from China with an alcoholic than 60 per eral hundred bottles. The liquor is distributed through a Chinese trading house in Vancouver, po- | lice said. you may even write!.. THEN YOU ARE LIKELY 10 BE Ambitious, wide awake. You love life. You're hard ~ to discourage. If you can'treach a man by ‘phone= -alertly including, of course: for money? Just TY phone Beneficial. Get the cash you want fast. One phone @ Your correspondent's full and correct postal address M Your own name and return address in upper left corner MH AND THE CORRECT call and one visit to the office does everything. | Call up or come in todav! “YOU'RE THE BOSS” «--AT BENEFICIAL Loans up to $3000 and more 36 month contracts on loans over $1500 ~ Your loan can be life-insured 149-151 GREAT GEORGE ST, POSTAL ZONE NUMBER IF YOU ARE WRIT- ING TO QUEBEC, MONTREAL, OTTAWA, TORONTO, WINNIPEG, OR VANCOUVER. Help us to speed your mail—check the yellow pages of your Telephone Directory for full postal information. Phone: 6518 MAON\ —~ CHARLOTTETOWN % : — BENEFICIAL z of at FINANCE CO.OF CANADA ve-eanA Gold Cup and Saucer FILM NIGHT P.W.C. AUDITORIUM Monday, Feb. 12th - 8 p.m. Featuring * 1960-61 HAMBLETONIAN * 1960-61 LITTLE BROWN JUG — RENOVATE... or REFINANCE? Easter Trust has ample funds available for First Mortgage Loans | rr Gottan, WB Delslals — A. A. MacLeod. on } A. he Special Representative: Alexander B. Campbell, B.A., L.L.B. EASTERN doe GOLD CUP AND SAUCER PARADE -& SAUCER GIRLS i * In Person THE GOLD CUP _ In full color Come and enjoy an evening of fun and relaxation that will take you away from the mid-winter blues. * You'll see the Island’s own Joe O’Brien THE LOVAT SCOTS. * In Person PIPE BAND win the 1960 Hambletonian with Blaze Hanover oe snd San Parade Com to bring the top eee "tees oo tee ee ces to Charlottetown for the August 17th See ae ~ “BOWSER” GALLANT * In Person and “DIDI” WYNNE NO ADMISSION CHARGE Silver collection at the doot to be used for prizes for bands : and fitats in this year’s Everyone Welcome